Nursing is a lower-paying job that attracts contract workers, especially Black women, a new study says. Photo by Larry Valenzuela for CalMatters

Good morning, Inequality Insights readers. I’m CalMatters reporter Wendy Fry. 

Black women are overrepresented in what’s known as “vulnerable work,” according to a new report by researchers with the Urban Institute, a Washington D.C.-based think tank.

Vulnerable work refers to employment where workers are at greater risk of injury or exploitation, especially in temporary, part-time or casual work. These jobs are more apt to lack benefits, job security and legal protections, the study says. 

Black women make up nearly 7% of the U.S. labor force but are crowded into 60% of part-time work, for example. Among occupations with the most part-time workers, Black women are crowded into 60% of those jobs while white men hold only 15%, said Ofronama Biu, one of the study’s authors. Some examples of these jobs are office clerks, dental assistants, teaching assistants and tax preparers, she said.  

Black women in California earned 58 cents for every dollar a white man earned in 2021, according to gender pay data California began collecting after Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a pay disclosure law in 2020. The data does not take into account such factors relevant to pay as hours worked, type of occupation, job tenure, education levels or work experience. 

The Urban Institute’s study does take into account educational attainment. It concludes Black women are disproportionately crowded into roles with less security, predictability, and economic remuneration — even when they have equal levels of education as other demographic groups. 

The debate over pay gaps has become political, with some arguing that women’s own choices are why they often are paid less than men.

The study’s researchers compared hundreds of jobs, from teachers to firefighters to health care professionals, and ranked their various working conditions. Black women are underrepresented in higher-paying occupations, in contrast to white men, white women and Black men. 

However Black women also receive lower wages than others in the same roles, the researchers found. 

The study also looks at other aspects of compensation and wellbeing, such as benefits and job security. Black women tended to be underrepresented in jobs with employer-sponsored health insurance as compared with white men, and Black women were crowded into jobs from temporary agencies, which often offer fewer benefits than other work.

“I had an interest in looking at how Black women fare in the labor market aside from wages,” said Biu. “I wanted to look at other things that really impact well-being, like benefits and the number of hours you work.” 


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  • Rural realities. Economic outcomes are mixed for rural Californians, according to the Public Policy Institute of California. While housing costs are lower than  urban areas, rural Californians are more likely to be unemployed and their incomes tend to be lower. Also, 1 in 8 rural households lacks internet broadband access, compared to 1 in 12 urban households.
  • Shelter speed-up. A proposed law that would allow local governments to address homelessness by building interim housing faster and more efficiently cleared the Senate Housing Committee Tuesday with a 9-0 unanimous vote.
Workers load packages into Amazon Rivian electric trucks at an Amazon facility in Poway, California, U.S., November 16, 2022. Photo by Sandy Huffaker, REUTERS
Workers load packages into trucks for Amazon in Poway, Calif. Nov. 16, 2022. Photo by Sandy Huffaker, Reuters
  • Safety stalled. California workplace safety rules for indoor heat protection are five years late, but a state board delayed them again, apparently over state cost concerns. Labor officials were incensed, and the state’s safety board rebelled, passing the rules anyway, CalMatters’ Jeanne Kuang reports. 
  • Funding fears. California’s proposed budget cuts to foster care funding could increase homelessness, advocates warn, according to The Observer. On the chopping block is a rental subsidy for youth aging out of foster care.
  • A decade for downpayment. A homebuyer needs to earn a median salary of $273,000 a year to comfortably afford a typical home in San Diego, and it might take more than a decade for a couple to save enough for a downpayment, according to a CBS8 report. A single person would need up to five decades.
  • Fewer cheap hotels. Los Angeles leaders want to tear down and replace many of Skid Row’s last-resort homeless housing — hotels where residents share bathrooms and kitchens — which could put thousands of people on the streets, the LA Times reports.
  • A millionaires’ charity. Valley Children’s Hospital, the largest children’s hospital between San Francisco and Los Angeles, paid its CEO  $5.5 million in 2021, more than all but two CEOs leading 15 larger children’s hospitals, The San Joaquin Valley Sun reports. Six other execs made $1 million each at the hospital, where 74% of patients pay with Medi-Cal. Some Fresno leaders want an investigation.
  • Formula flaws. A decade after California’s school finance reform, the Local Control Funding Formula has significantly improved resources and academic scores for the neediest students, though disparities persist, particularly for Black and Latino students, reports CalMatters’ Carolyn Jones.
  • Safety shortcuts. Central Valley farmworkers are facing increased risk of traffic-related death as managers circumvent federal transport safety laws by moving workers in vans rather than buses, leading to more deadly crashes, the Fresno Bee reports.

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The California Divide Team

Wendy Fry is an Emmy-winning multimedia investigative journalist who reports on border and immigration issues. Previously she reported on inequality for the CalMatters California Divide team. Based in...